Egg shortage in New Zealand will continue for months while farmers raise another 300,000 laying hens

Published 2023년 1월 9일

Tridge summary

The egg industry in New Zealand is currently facing a shortage due to a decrease in the number of egg laying hens, which has fallen short of the required 3.8 million. This shortfall is attributed to the transition from cage systems to new production methods, such as free-range and colony systems, following the phase-out of cage hens. The shift has been further complicated by the high cost of new hen housing and the need for a significant lead time before the chickens can start laying eggs. The situation is exacerbated by the return of international tourists, demanding more eggs, and the decision by supermarkets to stop sourcing eggs from colony systems after 2027. As a result, egg prices have surged, with the cost of a dozen eggs increasing by 16% year-over-year in November 2022, according to Stats NZ Food Price Index.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

It may take a few months for the egg shortage to get back to normal, says an industry leader. Egg Producers Federation director Michael Brooks said the country had about 3.5 million egg laying hens, but needed about 3.8m to assure a constant supply of eggs. To get laying hen numbers up would take months, because a chick that hatched today would not lay eggs for another four or five months, he said. An egg shortage had been making headlines over the past few weeks and Brooks earlier warned inflation and the cost of new hen housing could cause egg prices to increase this year. Under the new layer hen code of welfare, hen cages were phased out at the end of last year and hen numbers were down as farmers moved to new production systems. Fifteen small free-range egg farmers had closed over the past two years, with no new free-range farms opening last year, Brooks said. Supermarkets preferred buying from large egg suppliers that provided consistency and national coverage. The ...
Source: Stuff NZ

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